2,619 research outputs found
Recalibrating the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) W4 Filter
We present a revised effective wavelength and photometric calibration for the
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) W4 band, including tests of
empirically motivated modifications to its pre-launch laboratory-measured
relative system response curve. We derived these by comparing measured W4
photometry with photometry synthesised from spectra of galaxies and planetary
nebulae. The difference between measured and synthesised photometry using the
pre-launch laboratory-measured W4 relative system response can be as large as
0.3 mag for galaxies and 1 mag for planetary nebulae. We find the W4 effective
wavelength should be revised upward by 3.3%, from 22.1 micron to 22.8 micron,
and the W4 AB magnitude of Vega should be revised from m = 6.59 to m = 6.66. In
an attempt to reproduce the observed W4 photometry, we tested three
modifications to the pre-launch laboratory-measured W4 relative system response
curve, all of which have an effective wavelength of 22.8 micron. Of the three
relative system response curve models tested, a model that matches the
laboratory-measured relative system response curve, but has the wavelengths
increased by 3.3% (or 0.73 micron) achieves reasonable agreement between the
measured and synthesised photometry.Comment: Accepted for publication in Publications of the Astronomical Society
of Australia, 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Relaxed Bell inequalities and Kochen-Specker theorems
The combination of various physically plausible properties, such as no
signaling, determinism, and experimental free will, is known to be incompatible
with quantum correlations. Hence, these properties must be individually or
jointly relaxed in any model of such correlations. The necessary degrees of
relaxation are quantified here, via natural distance and information-theoretic
measures. This allows quantitative comparisons between different models in
terms of the resources, such as the number of bits, of randomness,
communication, and/or correlation, that they require. For example, measurement
dependence is a relatively strong resource for modeling singlet state
correlations, with only 1/15 of one bit of correlation required between
measurement settings and the underlying variable. It is shown how various
'relaxed' Bell inequalities may be obtained, which precisely specify the
complementary degrees of relaxation required to model any given violation of a
standard Bell inequality. The robustness of a class of Kochen-Specker theorems,
to relaxation of measurement independence, is also investigated. It is shown
that a theorem of Mermin remains valid unless measurement independence is
relaxed by 1/3. The Conway-Kochen 'free will' theorem and a result of Hardy are
less robust, failing if measurement independence is relaxed by only 6.5% and
4.5%, respectively. An appendix shows the existence of an outcome independent
model is equivalent to the existence of a deterministic model.Comment: 19 pages (including 3 appendices); v3: minor clarifications, to
appear in PR
First Evidence of a Precessing Jet Excavating a Protostellar Envelope
We present new, sensitive, near-infrared images of the Class I protostar,
Elias 29, in the Ophiuchus cloud core. To explore the relationship between the
infall envelope and the outflow, narrowband H2 1-0 S(1), Br-gamma, and
narrowband K-continuum filters were used to image the source with the
Wide-Field Infrared Camera on the Hale 5m telescope and with Persson's
Auxiliary Nasmyth Infrared Camera on the Baade 6.5 m telescope. The source
appears as a bipolar, scattered light nebula, with a wide opening angle in all
filters, as is typical for late-stage protostars. However, the pure H2
emission-line images point to the presence of a heretofore undetected
precessing jet. It is argued that high-velocity, narrow, precessing jets
provide the mechanism for creating the observed wide-angled outflow cavity in
this source.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
From Spitzer Galaxy Photometry to Tully-Fisher Distances
This paper involves a data release of the observational campaign: Cosmicflows
with Spitzer (CFS). Surface photometry of the 1270 galaxies constituting the
survey is presented. An additional ~ 400 galaxies from various other Spitzer
surveys are also analyzed. CFS complements the Spitzer Survey of Stellar
Structure in Galaxies, that provides photometry for an additional 2352
galaxies, by extending observations to low galactic latitudes (|b|<30 degrees).
Among these galaxies are calibrators, selected in K band, of the Tully-Fisher
relation. The addition of new calibrators demonstrate the robustness of the
previously released calibration. Our estimate of the Hubble constant using
supernova host galaxies is unchanged, H0 = 75.2 +/- 3.3 km/s/Mpc.
Distance-derived radial peculiar velocities, for the 1935 galaxies with all the
available parameters, will be incorporated into a new data release of the
Cosmicflows project. The size of the previous catalog will be increased by 20%,
including spatial regions close to the Zone of Avoidance.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 16 pages, 14 figures, 6 table
Challenges to the real-world delivery of brief alcohol interventions in the custody suite: qualitative study
Aims and method
The aim was to evaluate an innovative pathway in police custody suites that aimed to specifically address alcohol-related health needs through screening and brief interventions by police custody staff. This paper presents a qualitative investigation of challenges involved in implementing the pathway. Qualitative interviews were carried out with 22 staff involved with commissioning and delivering the pathway; thematic analysis of interview data was then undertaken.
Results
An overarching theme highlights the challenges and uncertainties of delivering brief alcohol interventions in the custody suite. These include challenges related to the setting, the confidence and competence of the staff, identifying for whom a brief intervention would be of benefit and the nature of the brief intervention.
Clinical implications
Our findings show that there is a lack of clarity over how alcohol-related offending can be identified in police custody, whose role it is to do that and how to intervene
Galaxies behind the Galactic plane: First results and perspectives from the VVV Survey
Vista Variables in The Via Lactea (VVV) is an ESO variability survey that is
performing observations in near infrared bands (ZYJHKs) towards the Galactic
bulge and part of the disk with the completeness limits at least 3 mag deeper
than 2MASS. In the present work, we searched in the VVV survey data for
background galaxies near the Galactic plane using ZYJHKs photometry that covers
1.636 square degrees. We identified 204 new galaxy candidates by analyzing
colors, sizes, and visual inspection of multi-band (ZYJHKs) images. The galaxy
candidates colors were also compared with the predicted ones by star counts
models considering a more realistic extinction model at the same completeness
limits observed by VVV. A comparison of the galaxy candidates with the expected
one by Milennium simulations is also presented. Our results increase the number
density of known galaxies behind the Milky Way by more than one order of
magnitude. A catalog with galaxy properties including ellipticity, Petrosian
radii and ZYJHKs magnitudes is provided, as well as comparisons of the results
with other surveys of galaxies towards Galactic plane.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables; in press at The Astronomical Journa
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